Tong Nou And Chu-Teng
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is a 1994 point-and-click adventure game by Japanese artist Osamu Sato. The plot follows a man named Rin whose soul is taken by the island of Tong-Nou. Rin travels to Tong-Nou to fulfill the lives of nine creatures and regain his soul. Whenever Rin dies, the player chooses what creature Rin will be reincarnated into. Sato began development on ''Eastern Mind'' in 1993 with three collaborators. He incorporated several of his own spiritual beliefs, including reincarnation and animism, in the game's plot. It was published in Japan by
Sony Music Entertainment Japan , often abbreviated as SMEJ or simply SME, and also known as Sony Music Japan for short (stylized as ''SonyMusic''), is a Japanese music arm for Sony. Founded in 1968 as CBS/Sony, SMEJ is directly owned by Sony Group Corporation and is opera ...
in 1994 for
Classic Mac OS Mac OS (originally System Software; retronym: Classic Mac OS) is the series of operating systems developed for the Macintosh family of personal computers by Apple Computer from 1984 to 2001, starting with System 1 and ending with Mac OS 9. The ...
and worldwide by Sony Imagesoft the following year for Windows. Critics gave mixed reactions to the game, with some praising its surreal imagery, but many describing it as bizarre and disturbing. A sequel, was released in 1995.


Plot and gameplay

''Eastern Mind'' is a point-and-click adventure game about a man named Rin who has lost his soul. A friend gives him an artificial soul that will last 49 days, with which he goes on a quest to the island of Tong Nou to recover his soul. The island takes the form of a human head and the player can enter its various orificies to access locations in the game. The player must die and be reincarnated as nine different creatures in order to complete nine unique missions. After dying, the outcome of Rin's transmigration is determined by the player's specific choice between three pairs of eyes, three noses, and three mouths. When every mission has been completed, the player is able to reach Central Mountain and recover Rin's soul.


Development

In 1993, game director, producer, artist, composer, and co-writer Osamu Sato became Sony Music Japan's Digital Entertainment Program's Grand Prix winner. This, plus other awards on his résumé, allowed him to create ''Eastern Mind'' as a four-person team which included himself and his wife. This gave him the leverage he needed to get Sony to publish the game. Sato began development on ''Chu-Teng'' after the publication of ''Eastern Mind''. The games were originally designed to be part of a trilogy, but this idea was abandoned during development. He would follow these projects with another game, '' LSD: Dream Emulator'', in 1998. Sato described ''Eastern Mind'' as an interactive
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experience rather than a video game, as he felt this classification would give him more legitimacy in the American market. Incorporating elements of his own Buddhist belief system, the game explores transmigration; dying is not seen as a typical game over state, ending the narrative. It is instead followed by the player revived as a different character, a process necessary to advance through the story. The game was created using Macromedia Director. Sato felt it was important that he appear in his game; the green island of Tong Nou is an altered version of the head of the game's designer. At the time of development, Sato was a techno-house musician; he therefore used this genre for the game's soundtrack. There is no voice acting, and instead the words appear at the bottom of the screen as subtitles. The narrative was co-written by Hiroko Nishikawa, who worked as a screenwriter on many of Sato's works. ''Hardcore Gaming 101'' surmised that Sato designed the sequel to be more traditional out of fear that the first game's weirdness may have scared people away, noting that in retrospect this became ''Eastern Mind''s draw card. Five of the game's musical tracks would be featured on Sato's 1995 album ''Transmigration''. Reworked versions of the game's themes would be released on another album of Sato's in 2017, ''All Things Must Be Equal''.


Release

''Eastern Mind'' was first released in Japan by
Sony Music Entertainment Japan , often abbreviated as SMEJ or simply SME, and also known as Sony Music Japan for short (stylized as ''SonyMusic''), is a Japanese music arm for Sony. Founded in 1968 as CBS/Sony, SMEJ is directly owned by Sony Group Corporation and is opera ...
in April 1994, and was later localized in English and released by Sony Imagesoft for
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as well as Mac OS in early August 1995. The game was also planned to be released for the
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, but fell through. The game became extremely rare, and by 2002, the game would sell on eBay to collectors for a few hundred dollars. For many years, the game passed hands through anonymous torrent files. In 2008, a blogger discovered the game and started a YouTube channel to highlight it and to follow the rediscovery of its sequel.


Reception

''Tap Repeatedly'' thought the game was the strangest they had ever played, and loved the game for it. ''Quandary'' felt the title's identity was torn between a game and an exploration of multimedia capabilities. ''PC Multimedia & Entertainment Magazine'' wrote that while the game is enjoyable to play, it may be asking too much of their readers to take a leap of faith and pay for the product. ''Vice'' described it as one of the most bizarre and terrifying games of all time, additionally deeming it "self-indulgent", "psychedelic", "disturbing", and "niche". The site also pointed out that the game is often ridiculed as an example of the strangeness of Japanese culture, rather than a testament to the blood, sweat, and tears Sato poured into his work. ''Complex'' listed the game in a list of ''The 10 Weirdest Japanese Video Games Ever Made'', deeming it an obscure freak show. ''Wired'' praised the game as an overwhelmingly surreal '' Myst''-like experience, complimenting Sato's simultaneously elaborate and childlike art design. ''Hardcore Gaming 101'' noted the difficulty of the puzzles due to the game purposely being devoid of logic, and embraced this as a positive. ''Kill Screen'' felt that the title was not a game, and rather a window into the recesses of Sato's mind. ''Biglobe'' felt the characters were eerie and humorous, praising the sense of oriental animism that pervaded the experience. Publication ''Karapaia'' thought the game "tastes the strangeness that lurks in the depths of psychology". ''Rolling Stone'' suggested that the game instills an "initial tinge of disorientation hatgives way to cultural vertigo" as the Western player realises that unlike usual games where they kill the enemy, the protagonist has to die in order to progress. ''Wall Street Journal'' deemed it "more of a journey than a story or moral tale". ''
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'' reviewed the Macintosh version of the game, rating it two stars out of five, and stated that "''Eastern Mind'' gives the feel of a complex mythology based on the Buddhist ideal of continual reincarnation as progress toward redemption. Maybe players versed in ethnic studies can even use that knowledge to their advantage in the course of the game; but we have no idea."


''Chu-Teng''

A sequel, titled ''Chu-Teng'' (中天, ), was released in Japan for Mac and Windows in October 1995. Originally considered lost media due to its extreme rarity, the game's ISO image surfaced on the internet in 2014. Reviewing the game, ''Hardcore Gaming 101'' felt that with the transmigration element dropped, it became more of an ordinary adventure game than its predecessor, which was a "letdown" due to stripping away what they believed made ''Eastern Mind'' "great".


Notes


References

{{Reflist 1994 video games Classic Mac OS games Epic/Sony Records games Point-and-click adventure games Single-player video games Sony Music Entertainment Japan franchises Surrealist video games Video games developed in Japan Video games scored by Osamu Sato Windows games